A woman is suing Apple because she didn't think the iPhone had a notch - check out Apple's marketing and decide for yourself

Kif LeswingDec 15, 2018, 03.26 AM

Apple's iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max have a "notch" on the top of the device to make room for the front-facing camera.

However, many Apple marketing images use a black background where the notch is less visible.

One person said in a legal complaint filed Friday that she did not know the device had a notch when she pre-ordered the phone because of the marketing images.

There's no guarantee that the class-action lawsuit will be successful.

The core design element of Apple's iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max phones is what most people call "the notch."

It's a cutout on the top of the phone's screen so that Apple can pack in the advanced cameras necessary for the FaceID facial recognition security, without adding bezels around the phone's edges.

But in much of Apple's recent marketing, the so-called notch blends into the screen, because Apple displays a black background in many of the promotional images and on the front page of its website.

Now, someone is saying that those images are misleading - and she's suing over it.

In a complaint filed Friday in the Northern District of California, Courtney Davis' lawyers accuse Apple of designing its advertising to obscure the notch, leading Davis to believe that the iPhone XS Max she pre-ordered wouldn't actually come with a notch.

"Images that disguise the missing pixels on the Products' screens are prominent on Defendant's website, as well as in the advertisements of retailers who sell the products," reads the complaint, in part. "These images were relied on by Plaintiff DAVIS, who believed that the iPhone XS and XS Max would not have a notch at the top of the phone."

There are other matters cited in the complaint, including a claim Apple shouldn't count pixels on the corners of the device in its advertising, because they are rounded off.

A screenshot from Apple's online store.Screenshot/Apple

The lawsuit is seeking class-action status, as well as damages from Apple. It may be years before there's any substantial developments one way or the other, given how long class-action lawsuits usually take to progress. Indeed, there's no guarantee that this will ever come to court at all.

But Friday's complaint is the first time that the marketing images related to the latest premium iPhones - starting at $1000 - are being closely scrutinized in a legal sense. When the marketing images currently being used were leaked in August, many tech commentators observed that the black background effectively hid the notch from being readily apparent.

Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The entire complaint is embedded below:

I like how Apple very conveniently chose an wallpaper that is completely black around the notch for their hero image https://t.co/YfWuqEYGze